StaySalty said:
. . . According to 1 John 1:9, we have confidence that God has forgiven us, and therefore we shouldn't hold on to guilt, right? We have been (and currently are being) redeemed by the blood of Christ, and this is NOT from ourselves, it is the GIFT of God. Not by works, so we can't boast.
Dear Salty,
I was so greatly grieved in my spirit when I first saw your post a day or two ago, and have been again several times since as the Lord brought you to my mind. It is so tragic that the church today has lost some very basic teachings of the Christian faith. No dubt your dilemna is a common one today.
I have some answers for you, but they are not of the type that would win you as my friend. The
eternally profitable Truths of God, as we should suspect when we read such passages as John Chap. 6, are difficult to entreat, as they attempt to peel back the layers of hardness and protection we have formed over our heart through the years since being born-again (I am assuming that you are a born-again [Evang./charis.] Christian).
Recall, too, Paul stating how the more he Loved his "children," the less he was loved by them. As human beings, we are far more comfortable reclining in the shade of darkness than we are being blinded by the brilliance of God's Light.
In that which I quote you on above, there are some basic flaws in your understanding--and it's not your fault, for the traditional teachings of the church have beguiled you--and many others--with them.
Firstly, the Holy Bible is not just one great boig book written to all, for all. It is, as you likely know, a compilation of both "books" and letters (epistles). The latter were often very intimate in nature, written by, as example, Paul to his disciple Timothy, or by John to "my dear children" (1 Jn. 2:1). It is error for a Christian to believe that what was spoken by John to one of his "dear children," applies to all Christians.
When forming doctrine, each Book and Epistle of the Bible must first be considered as to who wrote it, and to whom. Then throughout the passages, we must look for additional "qualifiers," for instance, that tell us specifically to whom a promise applies.
Well, this is already getting too long, so to be brief: the promise of 1 John 1:9 that you quote, is a promise given only to those who qualify as a disciple of the Apostles (as compared to someone just under the tutorage of the mere "ten thousand instructors of Christ"). These (John's my little children) are Christians who continued on after the New Birth, allowing God to perfect them in His Love (1 Jn. 2:3-5), and who as a result live in obedience to the Commandments, who walk fully in the Light (as compared to just self-justifying remaining sins).
For others, more applicable is the passage of Hebrews 10:26-29, I'm truly very sorrowed to say (and not in any way said in condemnation and judgment: it's a cruel fact of life and of the church). Incidently, the word
unholy in verse 29 is better translated "common."
Over on the Baptist/Anabaptist denomination sub-group, if you scroll back to maybe Page 2 or 3 of the menu over there, you will find a thread entitled "The Law," by someone like "Illoaic" or some similar name. You will find a few posts by me on there that further explain the above.
People often ask why God allowed Lucifer to live. They don't understand that every Kingdom, earthly or otherwise, requires Laws that its inhabitants must submit to, and penalties if those Laws are broken so that people have a motive to obey. Well, Satan, as well as disease and poverty and even the guilt you, SS, are experiencing, are allowed by God to exist and continue as God's "police force": that which was intended to drive us back to the foot of the Cross time and time again, bringing us to our knees as a balling baby in total need of that which only God can truly, lastingly, and totally supply.
It takes a good half dozen or more "mountaintop" experiences of total brokenmness at the foot of the Cross, and obtaining of the subsequent Grace waiting for us, before we become one of the Apostes' "little children," and before the promise of 1 John 1:9 continues to apply (kindly notice the qualifier in v. 7: "if we walk. . . .").
"I
must [further] decrease; He
must [further] increase."
The person who told you that eternal Life can be had by any lesser way, lied to you, just as someone told them the same lie. Paul warned of this in 2 Cor 11, him even worried that his own "children" might still be likewise "beguiled" (KJV)--and they even had the advantage of having been told the truth from the beginning. So for us today, how great is the chance we will obtain these things?
"And who is sufficient for these things?"
But the Good News: ". . . He giveth more Grace." "Just" receive it.
Not the enemy, so please don't kill the "prophet," brotherjim at mail dot com